Thanks to the big network upfronts, there’s been a barrage of TV updates this week. How to keep track of which shows were canceled? Which got another season? Which pilots got a pass? And, most excitingly, which new entries got the green light? We’ve got you covered with all the important TV announcements in one convenient location.

(Note: some of the new shows may not air until 2017 if they are chosen to be midseason replacements.)

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ABC

Cancelled: Marvel’sAgent Carter (star Hayley Atwell had already been cast as the lead on another ABC show, legal drama Conviction); Galavant; The Muppets

Returning:Agents of SHIELD; Once Upon a Time

Passed over:Agents of SHIELD spin-off Marvel’s Most Wanted, which would have focused on the adventures of Mockingbird and Hunter; Spark, that weird-sounding “it’s 2016 but everything is somehow totally steampunk” drama

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New: Imaginary Mary, about a woman (Jenna Elfman) whose new relationship is complicated by the fact that her new boyfriend has three kids.

AND the fact that her imaginary friend from childhood (an animated character voiced by Rachel Dratch) suddenly reappears in her life. Awkward.

It stars Geena Davis and looks to be more of an “inspired-by” take on the Exorcist concept rather than having much to do with the original movie. Spooky, though.

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Next, there’s time-travel comedy Making History (previously known as In Time).

The time machine is a giant duffel bag, the jokes are actually funny, and the Colonial America sets and costumes look just one step up from Drunk History. Just a few reasons why this show looks extremely promising.

The CW

Canceled:Containment

Returning:The 100; Arrow; Beauty and the Beast; DC’s Legends of Tomorrow; The Flash; iZombie; The Originals; Supernatural; The Vampire Diaries; and (as noted above) Supergirl will jump to the CW for its second season

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Passed over: “Untitled Transylvania project,” which actually sounded like it had some cheesy monster potential; an untitled supernatural drama from Time After Time’s Kevin Williamson (this one is “being redeveloped”); and an untitled drama about Mars explorers

New:Frequency, about a detective who is able to talk to her dead father, also a detective, over a special ham radio (yes, it’s based on the movie, and yes, it’s almost another entry in this season’s time-travel derby); Riverdale, which puts a contemporary twist on the Archie Comics characters (but isn’t, apparently, an adaptation of the current comic book, which has been doing that for some time)